Thursday, June 2, 2016

Event Update For 2016-06-01

The seas, lakes and oceans are now pluming deadly hydrogen sulfide and suffocating methane. Hydrogen sulfide is a highly toxic water-soluble heavier-than-air gas and will accumulate in low-lying areas. Methane is slightly more buoyant than normal air and so will be all around, but will tend to contaminate our atmosphere from the top down. These gases are sickening and killing oxygen-using life all around the world, including human life, as our atmosphere is increasingly poisoned. Because both gases are highly flammable and because our entire civilization is built around fire and flammable fuels, this is leading to more fires and explosions. This is an extinction level event and will likely decimate both the biosphere and human population and it is debatable whether humankind can survive this event.

A. More fires and more explosions, especially along the coasts, but everywhere generally.
B. Many more animal die-offs, of all kinds, and especially oceanic species.
C. More multiples of people will be found dead in their homes, as if they'd dropped dead.
D. More corpses found in low-lying areas, all over the world.
E. More unusual vehicular accidents.
F. Improved unemployment numbers as people die off.

Quote: "A manager of All Metals Recycling told News 3 there is a large fire in the steel-mixed metal pile that started with some kind of explosion. He said they don't know what the source of the explosion was, but no one was hurt."

Quote: "Davis said the fire engulfed a pile of mostly automobiles that was about 30 feet tall and 30 to 40 feet wide."

Quote: "Hamel said the vehicle caught fire, igniting homes on either side of where it was parked, about 10:06 a.m. this morning. Both single story homes were damaged, and residents from both homes have been displaced."

Quote: "Police and firefighter/paramedics received a report that a green Toyota Camry was on fire in Lot 2 with smoke and flames showing and that the fire was threatening other vehicles. TL1 crew on arrival reports smoke showing in the Day Surgery Parking Lot — unknown how many vehicles burning. Paramedics were also dispatched near the scene at 10:50 a.m. to respond to a report that an adult female passed out near the scene at the top of the parking garage."

Quote: "Vehicle on fire in Penrith(Eden) 1 Jun 2016 At 16:46 firefighters were called to a vehicle on fire in Whinfell, Penrith. The fire involving an industrial vehicle was out on arrival so the crew damped down the vehicle to ensure it was fully extinguished."

Quote: "Sources said he was standing on the edge of the pool after coming out of the water when he collapsed all of a sudden and fell into the pool (around 4 ft deep at that spot). His father, who was swimming nearby, pulled him out of the water. He was taken to a nearby hospital, where he was declared brought dead."

Quote: "Officers followed on foot as the naked man jumped into the Fox River. After firefighters arrived on the scene with a rescue boat, they were eventually able to convince him to get out of the river, but the man was uncooperative. 'He lunged at officers, forcing them to utilize less lethal munitions, including a Taser in order to impede his assault and safely stabilize him,' police said in a news release."

Quote: "While unusual, Thursday's incident isn't the first run-in that authorities in Waukesha County have had with naked men. In August, a naked man crashed a vehicle into squad cars before being arrested near the Carroll University campus. Nearly two months later, an 18-year-old naked man allegedly stole vehicles, ran from police and trashed residents' landscaping before being arrested near Lower Nemahbin Lake."

Quote: "They call them rain bombs. A new breed of severe storm fueled by a record hot atmosphere. One capable of dumping 2-4 inches of rainfall an hour and generating voracious flash floods that can devour homes and cars in just minutes. And in southeast Texas, the rain bombs have been going off like gangbusters."

Quote: "The former California governor and his party cranked up their jeep and rolled out as the elephant began to charge. The 68-year-old actor and former California governor can be heard uttering an expletive as the chase cranks up."

4 comments:

Top to bottom again on this day we see increases (or continuations) of JJFH-type incidents. I enjoy reading that the authorities "don't know how" a big pile of scrap metal EXPLODED (let alone burned) or how a car 40 effing yards away from a building fire ALSO burst into flame - yeah, NO IDEA! Jonny's ON THIS SHIT and HAS BEEN FOR YEARS! They're too complacent with their own "fire tech" and old theories (that worked quite well until the composition of the atmosphere changed to include FLAMMABLE methane and EXPLOSIVE hydrogen sulfide) to even consider what this blog has contended since 2010.

GREAT WORK JONNY and THANKS for figuring it out before we all go extinct, wondering "what the fuck just happened?"!

MOUNT PLEASANT, Wis. — Rising water levels are eating away at the Lake Michigan shoreline, with conditions most severe this spring in a Wisconsin neighborhood where homes are in danger of toppling into the lake.

A combination of rain, wave action and a 4-foot-plus jump in lake levels since early 2013 is gobbling up the coastline and bringing a few houses precariously close to the edge of the bluff.

As if we didn't have enough to worry about with the start of wildfire season, we now have to face the reality of zombie blazes: fires that never really die.

Last year's Alaskan wildfire season was the second-largest ever — and it seems it never entirely ended. A wildfire in southwest Alaska that swept more than 8,000 acres in the Medfra area over the course of this week is a continuation of a 2015 fire that never went out, despite having ceased to visibly burn. The Soda Creek Fire raged through 16,500 acres in the same area last summer, according to Alaska Dispatch News. It smoldered underground, survived the winter, and finally reignited on Sunday, spreading to an acre within an hour.

These reignited fires — called holdover fires — are becoming more common. Sixteen Alaskan wildfires have been attributed to holdovers this year alone.

Loud bang over New Zealand town remains a mystery https://www.sott.net/article/319501-Loud-bang-over-New-Zealand-town-remains-a-mystery

The source of a loud echoing bang has the Palmerston North police and fire service baffled. A "deep resounding bang" was heard at about 10pm on Thursday, near Kelvin Grove. A police spokesperson said police attended the callout but they were not able to locate its source.

"It was a definitely a loud deep bang - nothing like a gun shot bang, which is quick and high pitch.

Palmerston North Astronomical Society member Noel Munford said the noise could have been a sonic boom created from a fire ball. [SOTT's pet theory]

But he said if it was a fire ball, then there would have been reports of people seeing a "bright light", burning space junk, shooting across the sky. [OH! try JJFH]

Strange orange object seen in New Zealand's sky https://www.sott.net/article/319489-Strange-orange-object-seen-in-New-Zealands-sky

A Kawerau woman says a "hard to miss" strange glowing object in the night sky has her baffled. (Watch video)

“Even the most pessimistic projections have turned out to be too conservative so far, as pulses of unusually mild air and milder-than-average ocean temperatures have eroded the unusually thin sea ice cover from above and below.”

Arctic sea ice set a record low every single day in May

[For perspective, look at the provided graph - DANG!]

[You know how I'm always harping about food shortages and crop failures as a result of myriad climate change vectors, Jonny. Well, here we go again.]

This year was supposed to set new records for Russian grain production. But that was before a persistent trough in the Jet Stream funneled storm after storm over the Ukraine through Western and Central Russia setting off record extreme rainfall events. Before a swarm of locusts invading further north earlier than is typical ravaged over 170,000 ares of corn in Southern Russia. Now the combined insect plague and stormy weather has put cereal crops at risk of shortfalls.

[watch a biblical swarm of locusts invade cropland - scary]

[also, in the comments section there, see French cropland threatened by too much rain]